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						 Clare 
						Hollingworth, reporter who broke news of World War Two, 
						dies aged 105 
			
   
            
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						[January 11, 2017]   
						By Anne Marie Roantree 
						
						HONG KONG (Reuters) - Clare 
						Hollingworth, who was a rookie reporter for a British 
						newspaper when she broke the news in 1939 that World War 
						Two had begun, has died in Hong Kong aged 105, a close 
						friend told Reuters on Tuesday. 
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				 In August 1939, at the age of 27, Hollingworth traveled alone 
				to the German border and witnessed the first column of Nazi 
				tanks mobilizing to invade Poland. 
				 
				Three days later she was first to report the outbreak of 
				hostilities not only to readers of The Daily Telegraph, but also 
				to the British and Polish authorities. 
				 
				"Clare passed away surrounded by family and friends with lots of 
				care," Cathy Hilborn Feng, a friend of more than 20 years, said 
				by telephone in Hong Kong. 
				 
				Hollingworth's reporting of the outbreak of the war was one of 
				the greatest scoops of modern times. 
				 
				"I broke this story when I was very, very young," she said in an 
				interview with The Telegraph in 2009. "I went there to look 
				after the refugees, the blind, the deaf and the dumb. While I 
				was there, the war suddenly came into being." 
				
				
				  
				  
				The president of the Foreign Correspondents' Club (FCC) in Hong 
				Kong, where Hollingworth celebrated her 105th birthday in 
				October, expressed sadness at her passing. 
				 
				"She was a tremendous inspiration to us all and a treasured 
				member of our club. We were so pleased that we could celebrate 
				her 105th birthday with her this past year," FCC president Tara 
				Joseph said in a statement. 
			
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			On that occasion, scores gathered to celebrate the former reporter, 
			who has also been credited with saving the lives of thousands of 
			Eastern European refugees by helping them flee Hitler's Nazi army. 
			Hollingworth was a long-time member and regular visitor to the FCC, 
			the expat watering hole of which she has been the doyenne for more 
			than two decades. 
			 
			The club would reserve a table for her at lunchtime, often calling 
			to check whether she would be popping in to eat and listen to the 
			BBC news. 
			 
			Hollingworth's great nephew, Patrick Garrett, has published a book 
			on his great aunt, "Of Fortunes and War: Clare Hollingworth, First 
			of the Female War Correspondents". 
			 
			According to Garrett's biography, Hollingworth had a natural talent 
			for "cajoling reluctant government officials, juggling incomplete 
			information, and managing chaotic logistics." 
			 
			(Writing by Anne Marie Roantree; Editing by Mike Collett-White) 
			[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
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